Christine Speer Lejeune

City Life

Philly’s Next Saviors

Computer programmers. Seriously!

City Life

Hope for Philly Kids

Maybe things aren’t so doomsday

City Life

Joseph Kim and David B. Weiner might save a few million lives with SynCon

City Life

Notable locals review the direct line to City Hall

City Life

Wherefore art thou Romeo? And who are you wearing?

City Life

How the Temple “T” became a fashion statement

City Life

The Ed of an era

City Life

The man behind the pub-quiz biz ‘fesses up

City Life

Meet the most promising Philadelphia artists of 2011 — at least according to the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, which just awarded $60,000 fellowships to these locals.

City Life

Bedbugs in Philly

Where’s the panic?

City Life

Led by Sabrina Tamburino Thorne, a new breed of attention-loving, camera-hungry partygoers are making themselves “Philly-famous” — and turning Philadelphia society upside down

City Life

Life Is One Big Commercial

This blog brought to you by The Philly Post

City Life

That’s the goal of a cadre of Philly cyclists who dream of turning the city into a bike-friendly paradise. In their way: one cranky Daily News columnist … and a whole lot of angry (sometimes punch-throwing) Philly drivers

Be Well Philly

Three Amazing Fitness Getaways

Fall wellness trips you’ll love

City Life

Contrary to popular opinion, Snooki did not bring back the poof, that retro, pumped-up hill of a hairstyle that’s everywhere right now. No, for that we can thank Brookhaven native Suzanne Martinelli, whose company, Bombshell Beauty, released the “Pouf” back in 2005 — pre-Mad Men bouffants, pre-Jersey Shore and, yes, pre-Bumpit. Martinelli, 46, worked in marketing — not hairstyling — when she dreamed up the combs attached to “enhancers” about the size of a spool of thread, covered in fibers colored to match your curls. Hair’s teased up; the Pouf is affixed beneath; and voilà! Big hair — and big business.

Bombshell’s Poufs and Sure Grip Velcro rollers sell in CVS, Walgreens and Ulta under the Sassoon label, and stylist Jessica Steele, Martinelli’s business cohort, uses them on that high-hair queen, Sarah Palin. So did it hurt when Snooki got credit for the uprising? “We just cringed,” Martinelli says. “That’s not what we are! But she’s got better PR."